Subcommittee Members
- Marcus Lucas (co-chair): Senior Director of Facilities Maintenance and Operations
- Melvin Williams Jr. (co-chair): Former Associate Dean, School of Engineering
- Kirk McLean: Associate Vice President for Public Safety and Emergency Management
- Matthew McNally: Senior Associate Vice President for Administration
- Scott Rembold: Vice President for University Advancement
- Jordan Tibbs: Alumnus, B.S. 2021
The Workforce Development Subcommittee was charged with examining, assessing, and making recommendations to measure and improve the University’s efforts in the areas of recruitment, training, and retention of its staff and faculty, as the decisions relate to race, culture, and faith.
The subcommittee reviewed the University’s strategic goals and policies related to this charge, obtained feedback from more than 25 percent of the University’s full-time workforce, reviewed employee demographic and retention data, and conducted in-depth meetings with 28 administrators, faculty, and staff.
The current University workforce is 51 percent white, 17 percent Black, nine percent Hispanic/Latino, and eight percent Asian. About 78 percent of tenured and tenure-track professors are white. Seventy percent of Hispanic/Latino employees and 57 percent of Black employees are in blue-collar positions. The subcommittee noted the University offers limited professional development and growth opportunities for staff and has a decentralized hiring process, which may affect efforts to surface a diverse pool of candidates.
Upon reviewing employee survey results, the subcommittee found the responses to the commitment of University leadership to racial diversity to be somewhat divided on a scale of 1–5. One survey question asked if the leadership at Catholic University encourages racial diversity, and 34 percent of the responses were favorable, 24 percent were neutral, and 42 percent were not favorable. Respondents were strongly positive regarding their own supervisor’s commitment to racial diversity and most indicated they understood the procedures to report incidents of discrimination and/or bias in the workplace.